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Law & Order: SVU Names Gen V EP Michele Fazekas New Showrunner

Law & Order: SVU Names Gen V EP Michele Fazekas New Showrunner

Yahoo01-04-2025
There's a new captain about to move into place behind the scenes at Law & Order: SVU.
Michele Fazekas, who most recently was showrunner on Prime Video's Gen V, is on deck to serve in that capacity on NBC's long-running procedural, our sister site Deadline reports.
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If the series is renewed for Season 27, Fazekas will replace David Graziano, who joined the show in 2022, ahead of Season 24.
The move marks a return to SVU for Fazekas, who — along with former writing parter Tara Butters — was a writer/producer on the show in Seasons 4 through 7.
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Her other TV credits include Dollhouse, Hawaii Five-0, Resurrection, Terra Nova, Reaper, Agent Carter, Emergence and Kevin (Probably) Saves the World.
In related, recent SVU news, characters from that show and Law & Order will cross paths during a two-hour event airing Thursday, April 17 at 8/7c.
'Over the course of the crossover, a mysterious phone call to Capt. Benson of the SVU leads detectives to the scene of a brutal murder,' according to the crossover's official logline. 'When the SVU and the 2-7 uncover a pattern of rape and murder targeting marginalized women, Carisi and ADA Price team up to charge the suspect with multiple crimes.'
Do you have thoughts on Fazekas' new role or anything else related to ? Hit the comments, and let us hear 'em!
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Wild Confessions From Former Reality TV Stars
Wild Confessions From Former Reality TV Stars

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time2 hours ago

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Wild Confessions From Former Reality TV Stars

A while back, I rounded up the most shocking experiences from BuzzFeed Community members who've ever appeared on or auditioned for a reality show to share their most shocking experiences. In the comments, people shared even more! Here are 16 of their top responses: "I used to transcribe some reality TV shows, typically romance ones. The couples were genuine, and even the feelings seemed real, but the lines were fed to them and twisted their emotions to be what the production companies wanted. I was paid to transcribe everything I heard, so I'd transcribe them saying one thing when the cameras weren't rolling, and then transcribe the conversation with the production team where they were prompted to word their feelings in an often manipulated way. Then I'd transcribe them repeating the lines they'd been fed back to the rolling camera. Sometimes they'd express a degree of frustration at having to use words that didn't match their true feelings. I was never a big fan of the genre, but it put me off reality TV for life." —cakecheese "Chef Wanted with Anne Burrell filmed at a restaurant I worked at. That's how we got the new hire executive chef we needed. The restaurant had two swinging doors, one to go in and one to go out. They had my coworker fill a tray of drinks and intentionally spill them when someone came in the opposite way through 'the only swinging door' in the restaurant. My coworker played her part masterfully. 😂" —smokinace "I've tried out for American Idol and The Voice. I was a karaoke DJ for 10 years. I've been asked to sing for military awards ceremonies and private parties (nothing big), but I've been told I'm a good singer, so I should try out. I went in for The Voice. They took one look at me, gave me three seconds to sing, and said bye. They didn't give anyone a real chance unless they were already interested in you." —mizmanet "I saw the American Idol audition experience in person. They have casting judges before you get to TV, and they deliberately filter out good singers to film the bad ones or stupid-looking costumes for entertainment." —panda_13 "When I auditioned for American Idol, I could hear hundreds of beautiful voices that continuously got rejected. The only people I saw picked were either dressed crazily (a guy dressed in full tinfoil while holding a toothbrush as tall as him) or people who acted wildly (a girl danced her way up to a producer like Shakira in slow motion). They did make it onto the show though, so...." —helenmelon16 "I know a couple who broke up and went to court because he wanted the ring back, and she was keeping it. They were contacted by a court TV show asking them if they wanted to be on. I imagine they have low-level employees just scrolling through state online filings of court cases looking for anything juicy." —hans___ "I can confirm. I took an ex to small claims court about 10 years ago and got a letter from one of those judge shows. I didn't do it, but my mom wanted me to since it was one of the judges she used to watch." —flyerboy6 "I worked on…we'll call it a controversial UK morning talk show, which is no longer in production. We absolutely used to seek out stories in this manner, and even worse tactics. 😬" —britneypeedonaladybug "This girl I went to high school with tried out for The Real World in like 2008. She was pretty, popular, and dramatic and had three pet tigers, so I don't know why they passed on her. Now she's married to a famous rapper and is an influencer with more than a million IG followers." —beaniebaby99 "I took the test for Who Wants To Be A Millionaire. Couple of things: I didn't realize you take the test first but have to stay through at least two show tapings to get your results, so I guess that's how they get at least part of their studio audience. 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The construction was supposedly pretty half-baked, too." —demoncopperhead "My friend was scouted for My Strange Addiction because she makes a living through teaching and working with taxidermy. They wanted to portray her as some sort of dead animal addict who compulsively messed with the corpses. It was not the case at all. She had and has a normal life outside of her work and is perfectly healthy." —problematik "Went to a taping of Whose Line Is It Anyway?. Ruined the show for me. They did multiple takes of a lot of it, with some jokes repeated, and others slightly tweaked." —mustaaaaard "I had a friend go on Tattoo Fixers. He was shown the designs before he actually went on the show, so he knew what he was going to get. The 'reveal' part was filmed a few weeks later after it'd healed, so he had to fake a surprised look." —doublekmama And finally: "I was on Trading Spaces while I was volunteering for the Ronald McDonald House. Doug was the designer. 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NEWS OF THE WEEK: Man claiming to be Jay-Z's secret son drops lawsuit
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NEWS OF THE WEEK: Man claiming to be Jay-Z's secret son drops lawsuit

According to court documents obtained by Us Weekly, Rymir Satterthwaite filed a notice of withdrawal with the court. Over the weekend, he posted a video on social media where he addressed the withdrawal. He said, "It has been a crazy couple of weeks. I have not stopped my fight.". "I did withdraw my case," he explained, going on to claim that there was "a lot going on behind closed doors". "We got to step back and play chess, not checkers.". Jay-Z has previously shared that Satterthwaite was hit with an injunction in 2022 for filing so many "frivolous" court filings.

Pop Culture Facts Might Not Know And Are Surprising
Pop Culture Facts Might Not Know And Are Surprising

Buzz Feed

time11 hours ago

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Pop Culture Facts Might Not Know And Are Surprising

The US version of The Office was almost canceled after its first season due to low ratings and mixed reviews. NBC executives were also unsure if the mockumentary-style sitcom would ever connect with American audiences. However, everything changed a few months after the show premiered, when Steve Carell starred in the 2005 box office hit The 40-Year-Old Virgin, which made him a big star. NBC also did something unusual for the time: it began selling the first season of The Office on iTunes, where it would go on to be a huge success (selling 100,000 copies). Carell's rising fame and the success of the show's digital sales led NBC to decide to renew it for a second season. "...Baby One More Time" has the somewhat confusing "Hit me, baby, one more time" lyrics. Well, that was actually a mistake. 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Our use of the phrase "flying saucers" started on June 24, 1947, after Kenneth Arnold, an amateur pilot from Idaho, saw nine lit-up "circular-type" objects flying in formation near Mount Rainier, Washington. When Arnold (center) landed, he reported what he saw, calculating that they were flying at around 1,700 mph and that they moved like "a saucer if you skip it across water." News of the sighting spread quickly, and when the newspapers picked up the story, they accidentally described them as "flying saucers." The sighting over Mount Rainier — which happened a couple of weeks before the supposed Roswell crash — started a rash of alleged sightings across the US and was the most well-known UFO sighting of the 1940s. Steve Jobs wanted to call the iMac MacMan. In fact, according to Ken Segall, who was the creative director at Apple's ad agency, TBWA\Chiat\Day, and came up with the name iMac, Jobs really liked the name MacMan and was "fixated" on it. Jobs did approach the agency just to see if they had any better suggestions, saying, "I have a name that I really like, we're going to go with it, but if you guys can do better we need you to do better within the next two weeks." Segall said that a week later, they met with Jobs and presented him with five names, saving iMac for last because he thought "it was the killer name." However, Jobs hated the name iMac, too. A week later, Segall presented Jobs with three more names and also brought up that he still liked iMac as a name. Jobs hated the three new names, but said about iMac, "I don't hate it this week, but I don't like it either, so now you've got two days." Segall said that the next day, a friend at Apple called him to tell him Jobs had used iMac on one of the models and that it was getting good reactions. The rest was history. In 2008, at its peak, Apple sold over 54 million iPods just that year alone. This accounted for around 40% of Apple's revenue. Sales of iPods didn't see a dramatic drop until 2011, when they dropped to 42 million. By 2014, sales had dropped to just slightly above 14 million. Though it had been released in 2001, it truly wouldn't dominate the market until Apple launched the iTunes Music Store in 2003. The iPhone was not the first phone with a capacitive touch-screen. It was actually a Prada (yes, as in the design house Prada) phone released in collaboration with LG. The phone was released in January 2007, and, in fact, a few days before Steve Jobs would announce the iPhone. As this GQ article points out, designers releasing cell phones were a thing in the '00s — most notably Kimora Lee Simmons's Baby Phat phone with Motorola, and Versace's gold flip phone with Nokia. Flappers wearing fringe dresses in the 1920s is a bit of a myth. Fringe wasn't very common, and most dresses would have been embellished with beadwork or embroidery. 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The first stars to put their handprints in front of the theater were Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks (seen above with Grauman standing behind them). Big, glitzy, star-studded Hollywood premieres are almost as old as Hollywood itself. The very first one was for 1922's Robin Hood, starring Douglas Fairbanks, and was held at the Egyptian Theatre. Sid Grauman, who also owned the Egyptian, had the idea to put together the huge premiere. When YouTube originally launched in 2005, it was meant to be a video dating site. The founders of it even had a slogan for it: "Tune in, hook up." YouTube's founders — Chad Hurley, Steve Chen, and Jawed Karim — thought that people would be really interested in video dating. They imagined people uploading videos of themselves giving bio information and what they were looking for. However, they couldn't get anyone to upload dating videos (even after putting up ads on Craigslist that they would pay women $20 to upload one), so they decided to open it to all types of videos. The term "fast fashion" was first coined in 1989 by the New York Times when the writer of an article about the opening of the first Zara store in New York was describing what Zara's business model was like. Walt Disney almost built his second theme park in St. Louis. In the early '60s, the city asked Walt to create a historic film about St. Louis for a 360-degree theater they were planning to build. However, Walt thought the city would be the perfect place to build a theme park, though this one would be a very large, multi-story indoor park called Riverfront Square. While it would've featured some classic Disneyland attractions like Peter Pan and Snow White, it also would have had attractions not yet built for the Anaheim park, like Pirates of the Caribbean. Reportedly, the deal fell apart in 1965 over the cost and how much the city (already financially drained from constructing The Gateway Arch and Busch Stadium) would have to put in for the park's construction. Walt, by then, was also already interested in building Disney World in Florida. When CDs first came out, manufacturers knew that people would be slow to adopt them. They were expensive, and most people were unlikely to replace decades worth of vinyl collections. So instead, they decided to market it toward classical-music lovers who would be more affluent and care about sound quality. Dolly Parton refused to let Elvis Presley record a cover of "I Will Always Love You" because his team demanded half the publishing rights in exchange for him doing it. This was a common practice for songs Elvis recorded. Dolly's friends told her she was being silly for passing up the chance to have the legendary singer sing one of her songs, but she knew the song was too personal and valuable to give up ownership. Of course, her decision, though difficult, proved to be very smart after Whitney Houston's 1992 version became a massive, massive hit. Dolly has since said she was thrilled at the idea of Elvis singing it and cried when turning him down, but never regretted protecting her work. Contrary to popular belief, Michael Jackson did not own the rights to all the Beatles' songs. It's a bit complicated, but he purchased ATV Music Publishing in 1985, which controlled about 250 Beatles songs. However, purchasing the music publisher did not grant Jackson ownership of the songs themselves; he owned only the publishing rights, which entitled him to a share of income. The Beatles' primary songwriters, Paul McCartney and John Lennon's estate, continued to receive their full 50% songwriter royalties on all Lennon/McCartney compositions. Additionally, ATV did not own the rights to songs written by George Harrison, because his songwriting contract with Northern Songs (which was later bought by ATV) expired in 1968. In case you were wondering why the Beatles gave up their music publishing rights, here's why: They were advised to put their music royalties into a public company (which they created in 1963 and was music publisher Northern Songs) because they were losing about 90% of their income to taxes — this way, they would make their earnings on capital gains rather than income and would be taxed at a lower rate. They then lost control of it when music publisher and Northern Songs co-founder Dick James and Charles Silver (the company's chairman), sold their shares of the company to ATV in 1969. And lastly, a Twitter user invented the hashtag. 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